4.3 Article

The roles of body size and phylogeny in fast and slow life histories

Journal

EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 6, Pages 867-878

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10682-008-9276-y

Keywords

Fast-slow continuum; K-strategists; Life-history patterns; Allometric scaling; r-strategists

Funding

  1. PanTHERIA Project

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Species' life histories are often classified on a continuum from fast to slow, yet there is no consistently used definition of this continuum. For example, some researchers include body mass as one of the traits defining the continuum, others factor it out by analysing body-mass residuals, a third group performs both of these analyses and uses the terms fast and slow in both ways, while still others do not mention body mass at all. Our analysis of European and North American freshwater fish, mammals, and birds (N = 2,288 species) shows the fundamental differences between life-history patterns of raw data and of body-mass residuals. Specifically, in fish and mammals, the number of traits defining the continuum decreases if body-mass residuals are analysed. In birds, the continuum is defined by a different set of traits if body mass is factored out. Our study also exposes important dissimilarities among the three taxonomic groups analysed. For example, while mammals and birds with a slow life history have a low fecundity, the opposite is true for fish. We conclude that our understanding of life histories will improve if differences between patterns of raw data and of body-mass residuals are acknowledged, as well as differences among taxonomic groups, instead of using the fast-slow continuum too indiscriminately for any covarying traits that appear to suit the idea.

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